Steps-4 |
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Title: Complete sentences |
Grade 8+ Lesson s2-l4 |
Explanation: Hello Students, time to practice and review the steps for the problem. |
Quiz: Discussion Step
| Id | Type | Problem | Options |
|---|---|---|---|
1 |
Problem |
Lions often like to chase wolves, wolves often like to chase deer. |
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2 |
Clue |
A complete sentence has a subject and predicate forming a complete thought. |
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3 |
Hint |
Two independent clauses are joined together with a coordinating conjunction that precedes a comma. |
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4 |
Sumup |
Can you summarize what you’ve understood in the above steps? |
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5 |
Choice-A |
We can rewrite the same sentence |
No change |
6 |
Choice-B |
Lions often like to chase wolves, and wolves often like to chase deer. From a grammatical standpoint, the sentence is well-structured with clear coordination using the conjunction "and." |
wolves, and wolves |
7 |
Choice-C |
Lions often like to chase wolves? Wolves often like to chase deer. Using a question mark after "wolves" in the sentence is not incorrect in terms of grammar. However, it may create confusion because it appears as if you are posing a question about wolves. |
wolves? Wolves |
8 |
Choice-D |
Lions often like to chase wolves:wolves often like to chase deer. Using a colon to connect the two statements in "Lions often like to chase wolves: wolves often like to chase deer" is not necessarily incorrect, but it might be considered stylistically unconventional. Colons are often used to introduce or elaborate on a list, explanation, or related idea. |
wolves:wolves |
9 |
Step |
Correct sentence - Lions often like to chase wolves, and wolves often like to chase deer. |
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10 |
Answer |
Option B |
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11 |
Sumup |
Can you summarize what you’ve understood in the above steps? |
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